“We set out to create a family of products that would
revolutionize the graphics market by introducing leading-edge technology at
game-changing price points,” said Rick Bergman, senior vice president, AMD
Graphics Products Group. “We’ve delivered on this challenge, broadening the
enthusiast gaming market so that more people than ever before have access to
the phenomenal gaming and multimedia experiences that the ATI Radeon HD 2000
series introduces.”

Available immediately is the Mobility Radeon HD 2300, the
entry-level part, which will be found in mainstream notebooks aimed at the
sub-$1000 market. The HD 2300 is built off the 90nm process and is designed
primarily just to power the Windows Vista Aero interface and playback
high-definition video.

Coming in July will be the higher-end 65nm DX10 parts, the
Mobility Radeon HD 2400 and HD 2400 XT, which will bring gaming capabilities to
thin and light midrange notebooks. Available at the same time will also be the
top-end Mobility Radeon HD 2600 and HD 2600 XT aimed at enthusiasts and gamers
interested in high-performance notebooks.

Notebooks from OEM partners including Acer, ASUS, Fujitsu,
Fujitsu-Siemens Computers, Gateway, HP, LG, Packard Bell, Samsung, and Toshiba,
and ODM white book partners including Arima, ASUS, ECS, First International
Computer Inc., and MSI, will be available beginning in May.

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This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

oh jesus... i just reread the article... this is actually one of their DX9 parts with a new name.... how embarrassing (for me because of my reading comprehension skills, and for them because they suck).

now it would be funny of that DX9 2300 would actually be faster than the DX10 2400...